Most
heroes get a facelift every decade or so, to keep them from showing their age.
The longer an epic saga goes on, the greater the chances you'll see everything
start over from scratch. But not everybody succumbs to the Etch-a-Sketch urge.
Here are 10 epic storylines that have never had a reboot. Ever.

Oh,
and these are in no particular order.

1) Star Wars

Star
Wars hasn't had a reboot — yet. Disney has hinted at plans to do away with
some parts of the incredibly complicated and massive Expanded Universe. But
even if Disney decides that Mara Jade never existed, that doesn't really count
as a reboot, since media tie-ins like novels and comics are usually considered
to be somewhat disposable. As long as Disney never decides that the Original
Trilogy, the Prequels and the Clone Wars
TV show didn't happen, Star Wars
remains a single unbroken saga, without any do-overs. Just wait until after Episode IX hits theaters...

2) Judge Dredd

Recently
we went to a talk by Douglas Wolk about his excellent new miniseriesJudge Dredd: City of Courts. And Wolk
mentioned that the Dredd comics have had a single continuity, from 1977 until
today — and in fact, the majority of Dredd comics have been written or co-written
by John Wagner. Dredd has aged more or less in real time, and his home,
Mega-City One, has gotten more and more destroyed by a series of apocalyptic
events. The megalopolis has seen its population drop from bafflingly large to
merely insanely large. Lately, some writers, like Wolk, have gone back in time
and explored the early years of Dredd — but nobody contradicts the backstory
laid down by Wagner and company. Tharg wouldn't allow it.

3) Stargate

The
Stargate SG-1 TV series follows in
the footsteps of Buffy the Vampire Slayer,
by acting as a sequel to the Stargate
movie rather than a new beginning. Thus, there is one continuous Stargate continuity starting with the
Emmerich film and carrying on through Stargate
Atlantis and Stargate Universe. Of
course, if Syfy ever decides to bring Stargate
back, they may decide to wipe the slate clean. And Emmerich has made noises
about doing a second and third Stargate
film, which would follow his own storyline and thus contradict all the TV
shows. But for now, there is only one Stargate.

4) Dune

Frank
Herbert himself only wrote six Dune
novels, but as of this writing there are 20 books total in the series, thanks
to the ultra-prolific efforts of his son Brian and co-author Kevin J. Anderson.
And the Dune saga remains a single storyline, despite a number of prequels and
explorations of previously-glossed-over crannies. There have also been a Dune movie and two TV miniseries, both
of which adapted the books and probably count as canon about as much as the two
Judge Dredd movies do, in any case.

5) Dick Tracy

This
newspaper comic strip about a square-jawed detective in a canary-yellow
trenchcoat has never had a do-over. And it's gotten pretty science fictional,
with Dick Tracy flying around in his magnetic-powered Space Coupe and meeting
Moon Maid, the daughter of the Moon's supreme Governor. Chester Gould wrote
Dick Tracy from 1931 until his death in 1977, after which the strip was written
by Max Allan Collins (who also wrote some great Batman comics and the terrific Ms. Tree comic) for 15 years. Since
then, it's had a variety of writers, who have brought back old villains and
restored some of the science-fiction elements — but Dick Tracy remains the
same guy as he was in the 1930s. Meanwhile, there have been film serials, TV
shows, and a movie co-starring Madonna — but those barely count and hardly
contradict the comics.

6) Doctor Who

This
British TV series ran from 1963 to 1989 with a single, albeit loosely
connected, storyline about a time traveler from another planet. When the show
came back in 2005, many people assumed it would be a reboot of some sort — and
indeed, at first, you could be excused for thinking the Christopher Eccleston
incarnation was a brand new start. But producers Russell T. Davies and Steven
Moffat soon made it clear that they were building on the foundation of the
original show, with tons of callbacks and explicit links to the past. We've
even had hints that the Big Finish audioplays featuiring Paul McGann's Doctor
are in continuity, too. Just ignore the two Peter Cushing films (everybody else
does) and you've got a somewhat patchy but unified universe.

7) Buffy the Vampire Slayer

Here's
the other example of a TV show that picked up where the movie left off, and
kept going without ever revamping its vamps. Buffy and its main spinoff Angel
form a pretty consistent whole, and even the large number of Buffy and Angel comics manage to avoid any massive contradictions, for the
most part. A few years ago, there was talk about a brand new Buffy movie, probably a remake of the
original with a whole new cast and new spin on the premise. But that project appears
to have crumbled to dust.

8) One Piece

Since
One Piece has recently become such a
massive hit, many people forget that the series has been on the air since 1999,
and in print since 1997. And after hundreds of episodes and chapters, this
story hasn't been rebooted for one simple reason: it's still not over and
there's not much of an end in sight. Anime/Manga aren't often rebooted (with a
few exceptions), but if any might have the potential for restarting, it's this
one. There's still so much to explore that Eiichrio Oda might not get around to
everything on the first run.

9) The Legend of Zelda

Think
that only movies and TV shows get reboots? Well, you'd be wrong — video games
see the same potential for new starts as any other form of entertainment media.
And when it comes to long standing series that might warrant a reboot but have
yet to get one, this is one of the few franchises with a consistent enough
story to warrant it. Each story is a new entry in a long chain of events, but you
can see why someone might think a fresh start would be needed after 17 games
spanning three decades.

10) The X-Files

This
quintessential science fiction mystery show lasted 202 episodes and has spawned
two movies and a ton of comics. But there's no sign of a new Mulder, played by
Michael Cera or someone, and we haven't seen a new X-Files movie that reveals that half the mythos from the TV show
was actually wrong. We'll probably get a new and reinvented X-Files (Y-Files?) in another 20 years, but for now it's a single unified
story.